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Fifty-Fifty Forever or Until Death Do Us Part: U.S. Estate Tax Surprises for Community Property Couples

Fifty-Fifty Forever or Until Death Do Us Part: U.S. Estate Tax Surprises for Community Property Couples

When a married couple resides in a civil law jurisdiction, ownership of marital property typically is governed by community property principles – rules that automatically characterize most assets acquired during marriage as jointly owned, regardless of the way ownership is titled. While these regimes provide clarity in a wholly domestic set of facts, they create significant uncertainty when a married couple has cross-border ties, particularly involving the U.S. The challenges become especially pronounced where one spouse is a U.S. citizen subject to U.S. Federal income, estate, and gift taxation on worldwide assets, while the other spouse is a nonresident, noncitizen (“N.R.N.C.”) individual for purposes of U.S. Federal income, estate, and gift taxes whose tax exposures typically are limited to U.S.-source income and U.S. situs property. In her article, Neha Rastogi addresses potentially problematic fact patterns for the married couple, including (i) ownership of life insurance, (ii) F.B.A.R. reporting, (iii) entity characterization of the ownership interests in a domestic L.L.C., and (iv) basis step-up for a surviving spouse when the other spouse’s lifetime comes to an end.

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French Life Insurance “101” – For U.S. Persons, Run Away

French Life Insurance “101” – For U.S. Persons, Run Away

An individual takes out life insurance in order to provide for his heirs and to obtain peace of mind. Tax treatment for the individual during life and the heirs is straightforward when everyone resides in one country. But when a life insurance policy is written in France and the insured or the heirs are U.S. citizens or residents, what the policy holder, his estate, or the beneficiaries may encounter is anything but peace of mind. To their chagrin, each may find that he or she is in the crosshairs of contrary laws in two countries resulting in sub-optimal tax results. In their article, Sophie Borenstein, of attorneys Klein Wenner in Paris, Neha Rastogi, and Stanley C. Ruchelman discusses the French and U.S. tax rules applicable to a French life insurance policy. Grown men have cried over less complicated matters.

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French Life Insurance Policies: A U.S. Income Tax Perspective

The world of available insurance policies on an individual’s life is broad and complex within the context of only one country.  Add a foreign element, and one is faced with a legal and tax labyrinth.  Fanny Karaman and Stanley C. Ruchelman explain how a typical French life insurance policy is taxed for a policy holder having contacts with both France and the U.S.

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